Irish Daily Mail

Sky race alert on ‘outdated’ films

- By Paul Revoir

SKY has shocked viewers by issuing warnings over a number of popular family films claiming they have ‘outdated attitudes’.

Many were surprised to see a disclaimer appearing across titles including Lawrence Of Arabia, Gone With The Wind, Dumbo, The Jungle Book, Breakfast At Tiffany’s and Aladdin.

The films on the Sky Cinema channels also include production­s such as Aliens and recent Disney offerings. They now have a message cautioning that they contain ‘outdated attitudes, language and cultural depictions which may cause offence today’.

This is applied to a 2016 liveaction remake of The Jungle Book as well as the original 1967 Disney cartoon.

It appears as text in the films’ descriptio­ns before the viewer decides whether they want to watch them or not.

The move comes as broadcaste­rs react to the death of George

‘Attitudes that may cause offence’

Floyd and the subsequent Black Lives Matter protests by looking at their content for examples of potentiall­y racist material.

This has seen a number of shows and films pulled from streaming services. Little Britain was removed from Netflix because of its inclusion of ‘blackface’ characters. But the move by Sky has sparked anger from some viewers who felt it was an overreacti­on, with one branding the decision ‘idiocy’.

Films ranging from 1980s children’s classic The Goonies to relatively recent movies such as Balls Of Fury and The Last Samurai also have the warnings.

Breakfast At Tiffany’s, released in 1961, includes Mickey Rooney playing an Asian character, while Flash Gordon features a villain called Ming the Merciless, which has been criticised as a racist portrayal. Gone With The Wind (1939) has already been removed from US streaming service HBO Max following criticism of its ‘racist depictions’.

But some viewers criticised the moves by Sky. One said, in reference to Aliens, starring Sigourney Weaver: ‘Well nice to know a strong female protagonis­t is an outdated attitude to Sky Cinema.’

A Sky spokesman said: ‘Sky is committed to supporting antiracism and improving diversity and inclusion both on and off screen. We constantly review all content on Sky’s own channels and will take action where necessary including adding additional informatio­n for our customers to allow them to make an informed decision when deciding what films and TV shows to watch.’

It comes as the BBC is facing anger that its archive digital radio station has aired ‘racist’ comedy material. The row centres on Radio 4 Extra’s decision to repeat a more than 40-yearold episode of The Burkiss Way.

The show included a sketch ‘parodying colonialis­m’ with ‘socalled jokes’ about black South Africans. Listeners contacted Radio 4’s Feedback programme to air their criticisms.

 ??  ?? Read before watching: The live-action remake of The Jungle Book carries the notice
Read before watching: The live-action remake of The Jungle Book carries the notice
 ??  ?? Censorship: Breakfast At Tiffany’s and Flash Gordon
Censorship: Breakfast At Tiffany’s and Flash Gordon

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